"Bilderberg
participants from states that are currently waging war throughout the world, organizing
killings, and purposely engendering and nurturing terrorism are a serious
threat to all of Switzerland's people, and should not be welcomed by them. Such
a risk of assassinations and discredit to Swiss neutrality and independence
should not be tolerated."

Along with the Freemasons, the Illuminati, and the Zionists, the Bilderberg Group is a member of that august club of organizations that in the minds of conspiracy theorists around the world, are at the helm of global affairs. This year, the group is rumored to be meeting in St. Moritz, Switzerland, and some Swiss officials are calling for the arrests of participants.

St. Moritz: For some it is a
kind of “world government,” for others, it's simply an outdated, elitist
discussion group. But one thing is clear: the participants are influential
figures from politics, the nobility and the military, as well from political, economic,
and media circles.

Bilderberg is the name of a
hotel in Oosterbeek, Holland, where the group first gathered in 1954 to
strengthen relations between Western Europe and the United States. Since then, many
rumors and wild conspiracy theories have sprung up around its meetings.

Although the list of
participants is published after the event, the Bilderberg Club is
discreet, and there are no information leaks to the outside. Former Justice Minister
Christoph Blocher once
tried to deflate speculation when he said of these conferences that he had "never
seen anything more harmless."

Leading Swiss banker Josef Ackermann is also
a repeat participant, as is chairman of the board of Novartis, Daniel Vasella, who attended
the meeting last year in Spain.

Whether the Bilderberg Group
will actually meet in St. Moritz - which would be the fifth time on Swiss soil -
hasn't been confirmed. Inquiring where the event will supposedly take place at
the luxury hotel Suvretta House
leads nowhere. The head of reception asserted that all he could tell us was
that the hotel would be open on June 25th.

The minister of justice of Graubünden, Barbara Janom-Steiner,
confirmed that she and Graubünden Senate President Martin Schmid
were invited. Also confirmed was the fact that the canton of Graubünden will be
responsible for the protecting “persons protected under international law.”

St. Moritz residents probably
won’t much notice the event. No barricades or traffic congestion are expected
in town. According to the Graubünden Police Department, there might be a slight
increase in traffic due to the arrival and departure of conference attendees.

Counter-events

However, in the Engadine region, the conference
of the powerful and influential will not go unnoticed. On Friday evening at the
Hotel Randolins, not far from the luxury
accommodations of Suvretta House, an informational event is planned entitled
“Free Switzerland - where are we headed?” The topic is the Bilderberg Group and
its influence. At the event, co-sponsored by the Young SVP (Swiss Peoples’ Party),
Swiss National Council members Lukus Reimann and Pirmin Schwander will appear. In
the SVP, there are sharp critics of the Bilderberg Group. Dominique Baettig, National
Council representative for the canton of Jura, has been firing on all cylinders
for months and has submitted a parliamentary inquiry regarding the Bilderberg
conference. [Read his letter to the Swiss justice minister below].

On the other side of the
political spectrum, the Young Socialists have called for a “democratic
convention.” The rally, approved by local authorities, is to take place on
Saturday afternoon in the St. Moritz town square. David Roth, president of the
Young Socialists and Lukas Horrer, chairman of the Young Socialists for
Graubünden, are slated to speak.

Swiss National Council calls for the arrest of
participants

According to a letter on the Bilderberg
conference addressed to Simonetta Sommaruga, a National Council member and head
of the Jura Police Department, Jura representative Dominique Baettig is calling
for the arrest of conference participants who are internationally wanted for
war crimes (George W. Bush, Henry Kissinger, Dick Cheney, and Richard Perle). Based
on the Rome
Statute of the International Criminal Court, such action is called for when
a country makes a referral or response to an initiative by the U.N. Security
Council, or by its own prosecuting authority.

Posted
by WORLDMEETS.US

The following is an excerpt
from an e-mail sent on May 9th by National Council Representative Dominique
Baettig to Justice Minister Barbara Janom-Steiner:

Dear Mrs. Janom-Steiner,

I write to you as a citizen
in a democracy to inform you, as the responsible government representative, of
my concerns referenced above.

Therefore, it would be good
if you would first familiarize yourself with my letter to Federal Counselor
Simonetta Sommaruga, and then, after appropriate consultation with Federal
Prosecutor Erwin Beyeler, take all necessary measures, should certain
Bilderberg participants - at least Messieurs Bush, Kissinger, Cheney, Perle, etc.
- seek to avoid a “Bush-Cointrin” or a “Polansky-Kloten” scenario, to arrest
these individuals at Samedan or St. Moritz Airports for potential delivery into
the hands of the various courts of jurisdiction (The Hague, etc.).

[Editor's Note: Kloten and Cointrin
are both Swiss communities with international airports. National Council Representative
Dominique Baettig's reference to "Bush-Cointrin" and “Polansky-Kloten”
alludes to the arrest of Roman Polanski in 2009. However, former President
Bush canceled a fundraising visit to Switzerland in February out of concern
that he would be picketed and perhaps arrested.]

They should not be permitted access
to the (Suvretta?) Hotel or the security perimeter of St. Moritz! This is even
more appropriate, since most of them were never democratically elected and are
therefore not democratically accountable. Reports of such meetings are never
published or made transparent.

Posted
by WORLDMEETS.US

Bilderberg participants from states
that are currently waging war throughout the world, organizing killings, and
purposely engendering and nurturing terrorism are a serious threat to all of Switzerland's
people, and should not be welcomed by them. Such a risk of assassinations and
discredit to Swiss neutrality and independence should not be tolerated.

Simply put: Will you prohibit
the organizers from holding any such conference in St. Moritz?